Kim Kardashian Shares Letters & Cards She Exchanged With Late Father Robert
Sept. 22 2019, Published 4:10 p.m. ET
Kim Kardashian revealed letters and cards she exchanged with her late attorney father Robert Kardashian Sr.
On Friday, September 20, she shared photos of their correspondence on her Instagram story.
The Keeping Up with the Kardashians star, 38, had written in a 2002 greeting card marked "incredibly spoiled," "I just want you to know how much I appreciate everything you do for me."
Kim had an early job for Robert and added, "I love working for you at your firm! I love you and happy fathers day!"
"He saved every card I wrote him," Kim explained.
Kanye West's wife, who raises four kids with him, remembers how her dad would always leave "notes when we lived together" before he divorced her mom Kris in 1991.
RadarOnline.com exclusively revealed how nasty the split was. Kris went on to marry the famed decathlete then known as Bruce Jenner but they divorced as well. She is now the woman Caitlynn Jenner after transitioning.
Attorney and businessman Robert Sr., who became world famous by helping his friend O.J. Simpson with legal advice during the former football player's double murder trial, died in 2003 at age 59 after a battle with esophageal cancer.
Kim admitted she would "snoop through his papers and the evidence books during the OJ trial."
"I was obsessed. I would go through everything on the weekends when they weren't around. I was 14. And he was like, 'You know this is super stressful, so you shouldn't be snooping around in here,' " Kim said earlier this month on The View.
Kim recently advocated for first-time drug offender Alice Johnson and she got out of prison with a Presidential pardon.
"I have always been really fascinated by crime, true crime, the law," Kim shared. "I told my dad years ago that I was really into criminal justice and he was like, 'This will stress you out so much. You do not really want to take this on.'"
"But I think now, having gotten so deep in helping Alice, I'm really motivated to get to know the law more and fight for people that deserve a second chance like her," Kim said of Johnson.
Kim, her sisters and his namesake son Robert Jr. always remember Robert Sr. on the anniversaries of his birth and death. The family celebrated him at an Armenian Bar Association event several years ago.